Receive Big Ideas to Your Inbox

Archives for May 2016

Meet Tom Hagerman

Tom Hagerman is a multi-instrumentalist who has recorded with everyone from M Ward to Crooked Fingers to Sage Francis. He’s also collaborated on pop performances with the Colorado Symphony Orchestra and—along with his bandmates in Denver’s DeVotchKa—created new orchestral arrangements for Sweeney Todd.

A performer at our previous Make + Believe event, Tom is a Colorado native who attributes his artistic development to music education in public schools. Here, we talk about Kickstarter guilt and getting attacked by bloodthirsty barbers/mini Darth Vaders.


How did you get started in music, especially playing such a wide variety of instruments?

I started playing music thanks to my parents giving me piano lessons early on and then later due to the fact that District 11 public schools in Colorado Springs had a string music program starting kids in the 4th grade. Every other instrument I play is something I picked up along the way to get a job done, I suppose.

DeVotchKa just wrapped up a collaboration with the DCPA on Sweeney Todd.  What was it like as a musician and storyteller to take on a rather gruesome character and plot?

I’m almost 40 and I think I’ve seen far too much violence and such on TV and movies to consider Sweeney Todd gruesome.  It’s far more absurdist comedy with a giant wallop of tragedy for good measure. I loved playing in the pit and I loved getting my throat slashed by the Demon Barber every night. Everybody involved in that production was phenomenally talented and it was an honor to contribute my small part.

You (and DeVotchKa) have toured all over, but you continue to be based in Denver.  What is it about Denver that draws you back, especially when there are other cities with bigger music scenes?

Denver has been incredibly fertile soil for folks starting creative projects of many kinds. It has always had all of the amenities of larger cities without the sometimes crushing lens of an an industry that requires folks to fit into a standard. It has been a double edged sword in the past. It can be hard to get noticed on a larger scale, but the Internet is changing all of that. I am a little afraid the sky-rocketing costs of things around here are going to force some talented folks out.

What’s something few people know about you?

Nothing that I could repeat in polite company.

What’s the last thing that made you laugh uncontrollably?

Likewise…

When did you last make time for make-believe?

Well, I’ve got kids, so I gotta do that stuff every day. This morning, in fact, I had all of my limbs severed by a 6-year-old Darth Vader wearing my black Casbah hoodie I got at a gig in San Diego.

Do you have a favorite TED talk?

I’m going to have to say that my favorite TED talk is Amanda Palmer’s. She is a songwriter friend of ours who also wrote the book The Art of Asking. I’m not going to lie to you, I haven’t seen the whole TED Talk, but I am mostly blown away by the fact that she has turned a potentially negative spot in her career into probably one of the brightest.

 

She was asking for volunteer musicians for her tour on her last record release after having had, at that point, the most successful Kickstarter campaign in the history of Kickstarter. She got a ton of flak for it from the musicians unions and even the press for not compensating folks when she clearly had the money. From her perspective, she has always used volunteers from her community at her shows, even in her van touring days. She always wanted to include her fans both to help showcase their art and to add some flare to her own—sometimes successfully, other times, not so. At any rate, she successfully flipped the conversation and in the process transformed herself from a villain into a hero. She’s kind of a genius like that.

With that said, I now feel crushing guilt every time I ignore somebody’s Kickstarter campaign. I’m going to host one myself later this year so please give in to the feelings of crushing guilt and give me money to make my records. I’ve got kids to feed, right after they saw off my limbs with lightsabers.

Photo by Josh Barrett of Ignite Images.

 

Quadrid Productions Video and Jonathan Saiz — Adventure

Recently, TEDxMileHigh Adventurers had the opportunity to don the filmmakers hat and frame a story about Denver artist Jonathan Saiz with their own questions. Check it out in this video, created by Quadrid Productions.


Quadrid Productions is a video production company that works with artists, makers, food products, and other businesses passionate about their craft to produce videos that capture the essence behind a business.

The contemporary art of Jonathan Saiz plays in the space between sculpture and painting, inspired by crystals and a reflection of a multifaceted, multicultural experience.

Meet Eleanor Allen

Eleanor Allen is fiercely compassionate about improving global water and sanitation services. She believes societal change can be accelerated through social entrepreneurship and organizations like Water For People, a global nonprofit working with four million people in nine countries in Africa, Latin America, and India.

As the CEO of Water For People, she keeps her organization transparent and cooperative, providing leadership in development work in water, sanitation, and hygiene A speaker at our previous Make + Believe event, Eleanor is a civil engineer who has lived and worked all over the world and speaks four languages.

Here, we talk about solving one of mankind’s greatest challenges and the joy of getting a fire hydrant for Mother’s Day.


All of us interact with water throughout our lives. What made you take the next step and become an advocate for this precious resource?

I’ve always been fascinated by water and solving societal problems. This led me to civil engineering. I felt I could help improve the world by designing and building water infrastructure, which proved to be true. Last year I really found my “why” when I did a career pivot from for-profit consulting to non-profit international development. This took me from large-scale engineering of major infrastructure (water and wastewater treatment plants) in cities around the world in developed countries to working with rural communities, government, and businesses in developing countries.

Water For People facilitates the development of high quality drinking water and sanitation to those that don’t yet have these services. Having access to water and a toilet changes everything and our vision is to make that happen for everyone, and to have it last forever.


Coloradans are well aware of water issues. We live in a water-sensitive state that will continue to proactively manage water use, supply, and demand as our population grows. This is true in other places around the world too. In fact, water crises are ranked as one of the top global risks. There is a water crisis going on right now that many people in the U.S. are not very aware of. About one quarter of the world still doesn’t have safe access to water and one third doesn’t have access to a toilet. Some people find this hard to believe, but it is true! The more people know about this crisis the more we can help raise awareness and put pressure on the developed world and the developing world to invest in these basic services. The benefit/cost of this investment is 5:1—people can go to school and work if they are not sick, don’t have to haul water, and don’t have to find a place to go to the bathroom. Quality of life and productivity improve tremendously as do entire economies—and consequently so does the global economy.

Why is Denver an important hub for Water for People and what keeps your work centered here?

We were founded 25 years ago by the American Water Works Association (AWWA), which is headquartered here in Denver. Our roots are the North American utilities and engineering firms. They are still great supporters (among many others) today! Typically our enthusiasts are people who really want to see the impact of their investments on improving people’s lives and helping communities progress through social change. Water is life. When it is hard to get, or is not good quality, life is very difficult. Many people that have traveled globally and have first-hand experience with bad water are big supporters of Water For People. Also people that work in the water or tech sector really understand and appreciate the work that we do.

Do you have a favorite TED talk?

Yes: Simon Sinek’s talk on How Great Leaders Inspire Action.

What’s something few people know about you?

I am named after three amazing women, all of whom I admire greatly: my grandmother Eleanor (my father’s mother), who was an incredible advocate for women’s rights and a community activist; Juliana, the former queen of The Netherlands who helped the country become active in international development, peace, and humanitarian work post World War II; and Maria, my mother, who is Dutch. She immigrated to the US and has been my lifelong advocate and coach. I have quite a legacy to live up to!

I also love going fast—whether riding my road bike, driving my car on the track, or flying a plane—I have a need for speed!

What’s the last thing that made you laugh uncontrollably?

My husband, who is my number-one supporter, gave me an honest-to-goodness, full-fledged 180 lb. cast-iron fire hydrant for Mother’s Day. We named her Flo! She is now a “sculpture” in our living room, and she is beautiful. My love of water pervades my life in many ways!

When did you last make time for make-believe?

I made time for make-believe yesterday, while putting my 10-year-old son to bed. I regularly tell him stories about Roger, our dog. Last night’s story was about Roger going skydiving. He invited us to come along. We had a wonderful time watching the clouds from the plane, and then we jumped together and did a beautiful star formation. It was fun!

 

 

Cerebral Brewing — Adventure

Interview by Kimmy Dumont

TEDxMileHigh sat down with Sean Buchan and Chris Washenberger during a recent Adventure to find out how Cerebral Brewing is marrying science + art, modern + ancient, and innovation + tradition.

What is Cerebral doing differently than other breweries in a market that is becoming quite saturated?

This is a tough question to answer without diving into a ton of marketing language. We are definitely aware of other breweries and the ones that are hot, not just in Denver, but everywhere. We want to make sure that we continually execute beers that we like. I think as brewers, we ride the line between doing things in a vacuum and saying “Damn, we need to make a beer like Beer x.” Our goal is to take a style or type of beer and bend and tweak it in ways that suit our palates. We want to offer you a beer that illustrates our brewing ideals.

How does history inform what you are doing at Cerebral?

History informs many aspects of the brewing here at Cerebral Brewing. We have thousands of years of predecessors that need to be considered when we develop new recipes. Among the factors that determine beer styles, there are cultural, geographical, technological and even geochemical influences that have all helped a style solidify in a certain place.

For example, Pilsner lagers were developed in the 19th Century due to a general complaint about ale quality. The people that developed Pilsner capitalized on new malting techniques from England, Bavarian brewing knowledge, locally grown hops, and it just so happened that the water in Plzen, Bohemia was very soft, which eases hop bitterness. Coincidentally, at this time, glass was becoming more and more affordable due to new manufacturing methods. All of these varied factors led to the production of a new and beautiful product that was much more accepted by drinkers and could be showcased in glass vessels that were prohibitively expensive before.

That type of example acts as a guide for us. When we approach a style, of course we want to leave our mark and apply our personal style to it but we have to look at stories like this and show the beer the respect that it and its originators deserve.

CerebralBlog_1

CerebralBlog_2

CerebralBlog_5

Where do you think the beer industry is headed in Denver?

I am honestly not sure. There are so many new breweries and many of the established places are in some sort of flux, whether expansion or settling into a new style set, it is hard to see what the Denver industry has in store. What I do see is the formation of a unified voice. We are a very proud group but we always talk and we are recognizing that we share many of the same growing pains and struggles. We are all pooling our experiences and knowledge to help people get through. While we are all competitors, for the most part, we are friends. It is a good place to be and I am as excited as the next person to see what happens here.

What do you hope to see for the future of your community, specifically Colfax avenue? How does Cerebral plan to contribute?

We love this area. I want to see the commercial spaces along Colfax Ave filled with awesome people doing awesome things. We know how hard it is to convince a landlord to rent to someone with no experience and we know how hard it is to pay the rent once you are in that space. We hope that developers continue to take chances and make this a hub of good food and fun places to be.

Our role is evolving, I suppose. We can’t really help fund projects or organizations but we do everything we can to accommodate neighborhood groups with a place to meet and really we want to be a place that fosters discussion about our neighborhood.

CerebralBlog_4

CerebralBlog_3

For cerebral, how do you see technology and art intersecting to make really delicious beer?

There can be no doubt that making beer is an industrial process. Every new piece of tech is interesting to us. Whether it is the newest controller interface or in-line flow meter, we salivate over weird devices that will make our beer better or make some of the heavy lifting easier. We will continue to add these things and analysis devices so we can keep a high quality and consistently manufactured product in place.

That said, brewing also takes instinct and an ability to execute a vision whose components are organic and biologically dynamic. The palette of ingredients offered to every brewer in the world is actually somewhat limited but infinite flavors and characteristics can be teased out as long as the brewer is willing to study, gain experience, and apply their technical knowledge with the care and attention that any artist is required to give their work.

 

#TEDxMileHighInstaMeet: An Instagram Adventure

Instagram is the platform where art and technology meet in social matrimony.

At our most recent adventure, TEDxMileHigh hosted it’s first ever InstaMeet in which experienced Denver Instagrammers spoke on a panel discussing the convergence of social media and photography. Rafael Diaz @Rafa.Diaz, Chloe Rekow @MileHighAndHungry, Caryn Cullinan @Caryn_C, and Adrian Narvaez @anarvz shared how to build and establish your personal visual voice on the ever-expanding digital landscape.

Instameet_Blog_KayleeInstameet_Blog_MrDarlingInstameet_Blog_Patterson

“It all started with a particularly delicious dish of French toast,” said Chloe Rekow, the girl behind @MileHighAndHungry as she discussed her Instagram page passion project that has now turned into a part-time job. “I’m constantly fine-tuning what my voice is. I started doing it for me and over time, it’s turned into something people really look for and enjoy.” Her advice for Instagrammers just starting out in creating their own visual branding? “Stay hungry.”

Following the panel discussion, adventuring ‘grammers went out in search of discovering Denver through their own personal photo lenses. With help from photography bingo cards with fields like “light +shadow” and “unexpected art,” participants used smoke, mirrors, and their own creative prowess to showcase just exactly what Denver means to them.

Instameet_Blog_rafa1Instameet_Blog_Double

Instameet_Blog_Itsbeteal

Thank you to our panelists, @Rafa.Diaz, @MileHighAndHungry, @Caryn_C, and @anarvz as well as our sponsors B-Cycle and Artifact Uprising.

Instameet_Blog_Tag

We’re using the hashtags #TEDxMileHighInstaMeet and #MileHighMakeBelieve to track photography from the day’s activities. The best photography will be featured at Make + Believe, TEDxMileHigh’s June conference, so join in! Tag your photos or submit them here before June 1, for a chance to win a $50 gift card from Artifact Uprising and have your photography featured at Make + Believe.

 

Words by Meg Ruggieri

Stay Connected

Spark your curiosity with talks and inside event updates sent directly to your inbox.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.